Named Entity Results, Plymouth, N. C. (North Carolina, United States)

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ent plan was adopted by means of which when the troops were visited by the paymaster, on signing a roll prepared for that purpose, so much of their pay as they wished was allotted or assigned by the soldiers to whomsoever they designated at the North.
To illustrate: John Smith had four months pay due him at the rate of $13 a month.
He decided to allot $10 per month of this to his wife at Plymouth, Mass.; so the paymaster pays him $12, and the remaining $40 is paid to his wife by check in Plymouth, without any further action on the part of John.
This plan was a great convenience to both the soldiers and their families.
In this division of his income the calculation of the soldier was to save out enough for himself to pay all incidental expenses of camp life, such as washing, tobacco, newspapers, pies and biscuits, bought of Aunty, and cheese and cakes of the sutler.
But in spite of his nice calculations the rule was that the larger part of the money allotted home was returned,

ed at the close of the war, and was captured by Admiral Dahlgren at the evacuation of the city.
The other three were blown up at the same time.
In the sounds of North Carolina two iron-clads were projected, one to be built on the Neuse River, the other on the Roanoke.
The first was destroyed before completion, but the second, the Albemarle, which the Union forces, through most culpable negligence, suffered to remain undisturbed until she was fully armed and equipped, captured the town of Plymouth, and fought a drawn battle with the squadron of double-enders in the sound.
After a career of six months, she was destroyed by the expedition under Lieutenant Cushing.
The last, and in some ways the most useful naval force of the Confederates, was the James River Squadron.
After the destruction of the Merrimac in May, 1862, and the abortive attempt of the Union vessels to pass up the James River, a fleet was gradually constructed and fitted out for the defense of Richmond.
There were

aracter than this officer possessed it is impossible to imagine,--patriotic, sincere, manly, modest, considerate, and truthful to an extent almost beyond description; and a braver man never lived.
Early in June he took possession of the town of Plymouth, situated a short distance above the mouth of the Roanoke River, and held it unaided by land forces until June 15th, when Company F of the 9th New York was detailed for guard and observation duty at that post.
It did not take a long time for ustly being on the alert, they succeeded in rendering unavailing all efforts to force them into the ranks of the Confederate army.
In several interviews which I had with Commander Flusser, he urged me in the strongest manner to occupy the town of Plymouth, and to organize the Union men of that vicinity into a regiment of soldiers.
I had several conversations with General Burnside in relation to this matter, and the final result was that he placed the affair entirely in my hands.
Accordingly,

that General Pickett, as early as the preceding November, had penetrated the enemy's design to make an expedition up James river against Petersburg, and, in a personal interview with the Confederate authorities, had represented this contingency and the unprotected state of that town.
He had even carried his representations to General Lee, who had referred him to General Beauregard, with whom, in consequence, he had had an interview at Weldon.
But, says Colonel Harrison, the expedition to Plymouth was at this time put on foot; much valuable time was wasted, and the troops which should have been ordered at once to Petersburg were kept in North Carolina doing little or nothing, while Pickett was left in Petersburg with merely a handful of men.
Colonel Harrison continues: General Beauregard was in no way responsible for this.
He had no control over these troops, and I have understood strongly urged their being hastened to Petersburg to support Pickett.
But the danger to Petersburg, f

difficulty; surrounded on every side by numberless active foes; and finally dying, not from the blow of an enemy, but from the fault of those who sent her forth unfinished and incomplete!
Those trying times recall the conduct of Captain Lynch and his squadron of shells; and of the veteran Cooke in the batteries, on the dark day that lost Roanoke Island.
Nor may we lose sight of the splendid conduct of that latter grim old seadog, when, returning wounded and prison-worn, he bore down on Plymouth in the Albemarle and crushed the Federal gunboats like egg-shells.
And conspicuous, even among these fellow-sailors, stands John Taylor Wood.
Quick to plan and strong to strike, he ever and anon would collect a few trusty men and picked officers; glide silently out from Richmond, where his duties as colonel of cavalry on the President's staff chained him most of the time.
Soon would come an echo from the frontier, telling of quick, sharp struggle; victorious boarding and a Federal gun

After this affair was settled I took the benefit of my short leave — the only indulgence of the kind asked for or received by me during the, whole war.
I returned to my division about the middle of March, and assumed command, finding it in its old position, nothing serious having occurred during the winter.
What was left of Hoke's brigade had been detached and sent under General Hoke to North Carolina, where it participated in some movements, including the capture of the town of Plymouth, with its garrison, by Hoke.
It did not return to the division until after the commencement of the subsequent campaign, though it took part in the defence of Petersburg and the attack on Butler by General Beauregard.
We remained in position in our old place until the opening of the spring campaign.
In the meantime Major General U. S. Grant had been assigned to the command of all the armies of the United States, with the rank of Lieutenant General, and had come to take immediate comman

truth.
Bless God!
in our prosperous North, that has been full and free; and it shall be as enduring as the Plymouth Rock, where it first breasted the New World's winter and storm.
That Truth is Christian liberty, unalloyed and untrammeled, the Pilgrim fathers' treasure; that is the citizen-children's inheritance, and it shall be perpetuated.
The Mayflower weathered the storms of a December Atlantic.
The blood she brought to America courses now in so many veins, and the spirit-life at Plymouth planted, is to-day so thrilling all true Christian hearts, that this strife must end in proclamation of a Gospel to the poor.
These we have with us always.
Let the people — the whole people, have the Truth-the whole Truth-and nothing but the Truth.
If this include body and conscience-liberty, be not afraid of that, and let the good news go forth to captive ones.
Truth is used to storms.
It has battled and beaten before.
Itself bled on Calvary, grappled with Death, and conquered the mo

Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, The military situation-plans for the campaign-sheridan assigned to command of the cavalry-flank movements-forrest at Fort Pillow-GeneralBanks's expedition-colonelMosby-an incident of the Wilderness campaign (search)

ds; and that part of old Virginia north of the Rapidan and east of the Blue Ridge we also held.
On the sea-coast we had Fortress Monroe and Norfolk in Virginia; Plymouth, Washington and New Berne in North Carolina; Beaufort, Folly and Morris islands, Hilton Head, Port Royal and Fort Pulaski in South Carolina and Georgia; Fernandiently Forrest made a report in which he left out the part which shocks humanity to read.
At the East, also, the rebels were busy.
I had said to Halleck that Plymouth and Washington, North Carolina, were unnecessary to hold.
It would be better to have the garrisons engaged there added to Butler's command.
If success attended that the Executive would be reluctant to abandon them, and therefore explained my view; but before my views were carried out the rebels captured the garrison at Plymouth.
I then ordered the abandonment of Washington, but directed the holding of New Berne at all hazards.
This was essential because New Berne was a port into which

ch.
victory of Gen. Forrest.
capture of Plymouth, N. C.
Gen. Lee's bill of fare.
April 1
Cived a dispatch to day from Gen. Hoke, of Plymouth, N. C., stating that he had (yesterday) stormed Plymouth, taking 1600 prisoners, 25 cannon, stores, etc. etc.
This put the city in as good spiritssom.
We have the following war news:
Plymouth, N. C., April 20th. To Gen. Bragg.
I have stove none of the details yet of the storming of Plymouth, except the brief dispatches in the newspape
It is said the enemy's killed and wounded at Plymouth amounted to only 100: ours 300; but we got 25ed at the enemy's accounts of the storming of Plymouth.
Their papers pretend to have not heard the il 29
A letter from Major-Gen. Hoke, dated Plymouth, April 25th, and asking the appointment of Lieral defeat on the Red River, the storming of Plymouth, etc., and charge the Federal authorities at Louisiana.
They also admit their calamity at Plymouth, N. C. Thus in Louisiana, Florida, West Tenne